Courses

You can add an automated course listing to your Web pages in the defaultmenu.html file or any other menu or content file in your site. This feature taps into the UVM BANNER Student Information System used for registration and will display course numbers, titles, and descriptions.

Courses for all terms

To do so, use this "special code" in the link column of your defaultmenu.html file or highlight the word and link to that page with a special code that looks like:

Courses&category=CODE

Where CODE is the 2- to 4-character-long category course code as found in the University Catalogue (For music, it would be MUS. Consult the UVM Catalogue to determine the course code needed).

Courses by term

By default, this lists the courses for the term currently available for registration (if no term is open for registration, the current term will appear). To list terms in the current, next, or last semester, add &term=current to the above special code. The fall, spring, and summer terms of the current academic year can also be called. For example:

Note, these links only provide results when the referencing term has been made publicly available by the registrar's office.

You would use the following code in your defaultmenu.html:

Courses&category=CODE&term=current

Catalogue courses general listing

A course listing, similar to the one seen in the online version of the catalog, can be added to departmental webpages. Similar to regular course listings, use this "special code," CatalogCourses, in the link column of your defaultmenu.html file or highlight the word and link to that page with a special code that looks like:

Graduate Courses

Why pull in courses from the catalogue?

The UVM Catalogue is an official legal document. Attempting to recreate on your own website is risky, time consuming and unnecessary when instead you can use a bit of code to pull in the legal content approved by the Provost and Registrar offices. You're also providing a singular experience for visitors who might see one thing in the UVM Catalogue, and another on your website (if you decide to not pull automatic content).